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LOYOLA MAROON VOL. XLVI Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday October 24, 1969 No. 8 Loyola students receive honor Thirty-four Loyola students have been nominated for "Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges." The students were nominated on the basis of scholarship, leadership, and character. Their names will be included in the "Who's Who" publication. The students are: Ralph Adamo, A&S senior, member of Student Council; Barbara Bennett, BA senior, Phi Chi Theta; Louis Biondolillo, Evening Division junior, member of Student Council, Blue Key; Stanley Bjurstrom, Law School senior, Editor-in-Chief of Loyola Law Review. Gerard Brechtel, BA senior, member of Alpha Sigma Nu, Beta Alpha Phi, Beta Gamma Sigma; Patrick Burk, S.J., A&S senior, member of Student Council; David Caruso Jr., law school senior, president of Delta Sigma Nu, Council General of the Loyola Student Court; John Conery, law school senior, president of the Student Bar Association, member of Alpha Sigma Nu, Blue Key. Jocelyn Develle, law school senior, Managing Editor of Loyola Law Review; James Dumas Jr., dental school senior, president of dental school, president of senior class, member of Alpha Sigma Nu, Blue Key; George Fisher, dental school senior, member of Student Council, Blue Key; Clifford Giffin Jr., BA senior, president of APO, service vice president of Delta Sigma Pi, post director, business manager and associate editor of the Loyola directory. John Gregory Jr., dental school junior, member of Chi Psi Phi, C. Victor Vignes Odontological society, SCADA; William Guste, A&S senior, student body president, member of APO, Delta Epsilon Sigma; Kathleen Hall, A&S senior, president of Delta Who's Who taps 34 Epsilon Sigma, cheer lea ding captain; Carol Laflin, A&S senior, president of WRC, member of Cardinal Key, Delta Epsilon Sigma. Michael Lange, A&S senior, Maroon editor, vice president of the Student Union, member of Blue Key; Antonio Lopez Jr., A&S senior; Rev. George Lundy, S.J., A&S senior; Frank Macaluso, BA senior, president of Delta Sigma Pi. Patricia Manning, BA senior, president of Sigma Sigma Sigma, vice president of Cardinal Key, secretary of the Dance and Entertainment committee of the Student Union, Beta Gamma Sigma; George Mattingly, BA senior, president of Student Union, member of Senior Project; Michael Miroue, dental school junior, C. Victor Vignes Honor Society, C. Victor Vignes Odontological Society, Psi Phi; Charmaine Morales, School of Music senior, Phi Beta. Patricia Nugent, A&S senior, member of Cardinal Key; Linda O'Dwyer, A&S senior, Dean's List, Phi Phi Phi, National Honor Society, Curriculum Planning committee; Wayne Pike, Evening Division junior; Robert Roux, School of Music senior. Elisa Specht, A&S senior, Tri Sigma; Lloyd Tate, BA senior, member of Student Union; Pamela Tiller, A&S junior, president of LSL; Elizabeth Valadie, A&S senior. Alan Vera, A&S senior, ROTC battalion commander; SUsa Wheeler, A&S senior, member of Beta Phi, WRC, Cardinal Key. The students who have been nominated are now required to fill out information sheets and return them to national Who's Who headquarters for publication in teh 1969-70 edition of the student's Who's Who. The Loyola nominees will receive certificates to not this accomplishment at Awards Day which will be held during the Spring semester. SYMPOSIUM GUEST-Author Harry Crews listens attentively to the poetry readings of Dr. John Corrington during Wednesday's opening of the English department's Writer's Symposium. The event closes today with a panel discussion in rooms 2 A,B, and C of Danna Center. Leaders term moratorium successful ByANNALYN SWAN (Maroon Staff Reporter) The peace banners are gone, the armbands have disappeared, and in the Danna Center the TV once again reigns supreme~the October 15 Moratorium Day is over. To the organizers of Loyola's memorial service, however, October 15 stands as a crucial date, the springboard for future activation in the cause of peace. Campus moratorium organizers the Rev. Joseph Tetlow, S.J., and Students for Peace members John Aselage and Jim Brehony agree that both the Loyola service and subsequent march were successful. "When a large number of people turn out for an anti-war protest in a traditionally conservative city like New Orleans, that protest must be termed a success," said freshman Aselage. Aselage also pointed out the importance of Loyola's service: "The campus memorial observance was a success. Although only 250 people turned out for the service, a good core of antiwar support was formed in Loyola, a core which probably will grow as the war continues." November action planned Father Tetlow viewed the campus service from several different perspectives. "I didn't think it entirely successful because it didn't mobilize the opinion of the entire university against war. To that extent it was a failure," he said. "However, that is really a small view," he added. "In a larger view the moratorium at Loyola was a success, because first, it created a climate of discussion and a moral pressure to take a stance; second, it demonstrated the strength of antiwar feeling on campus." The march downtown on October 15 also impressed Father Tetlow. He thought that the large turnout showed students* ability to mobilize opinion and action on a central national issue. Jim Brehony described the intense unity of the moratorium participants as a factor of importance: "There was just this air of closeness among the crowd (at City Hall.) Everyone listened to the speakers, enjoyed the band, and turned on to the cause." Father Tetlow, Aselage, and Brehony feel that the moratorium's success, both in New Orleans and across the country, will inevitably have Lundy initiates 'Operation College Bound' A college placement program for poor and disadvantaged high school seniors in the New Orleans area has been initiated by George Lundy, S.J., A&S senior, director of the program. Operation College Bound, directed and completely staffed by Loyola students, is a "clearing house" designed to serve as a liaison between students and universities, said Lundy. The program, the first of its kind in the city, is attempting to fill the counseling deficiency in the New Orleans School system, noted Lundy. He pointed out that there are 600 students to every counselor in the school system. Lundy explained that almost 50 per cent of all white high school graduates in America today go on to college, but only less than 15 per cent of the minority group students go on to higher learning. He said these figures reflect the need for a College Bound program. Out of the 20 schools in the metropolitan area invited to participate in the program only six accepted. They are George Washington Carver, Joseph S. Clark, Waller L. Cohen, Francis T. Nicholls, St. Augustine, and Booker T. Washington. Of these, the only predominately white school is Nicholls. Lundy noted that only students who have attained a 77 average or higher in high school are eligible to partake in the program. "There is just about nothing we can do with a student with a D average," he said. During the past summer, letters were sent to all of the four year colleges and universities in the United States, said Lundy. Specific information was requested concerning admission policies, special remedial programs and financial assistance. Over 500 colleges responded and the information was stored in the Loyola computer facilities, he said. In this way, opportunities offered by colleges and universities nationwide can be matched quickly with the needs and credentials of the high school seniors, he explained. Applications to the program are coming in and are expected to reach 700 before the October 28 deadline, said Lundy. To determine who is eligible for the program, a senior assembly is conducted at participating high schools. Applications are distributed which are turned in to the high school counselors. The counselors screen the applications to eliminate those students clearly ineligible. The applications are then turned over to College Bound. The students accepted are then invited to take part in a pre-testing program which is designed to familiarize them with the college board examination they will take in December. The students will take the sample test at Loyola on Sunday, November 2. On the following three Sunday afternoons, the students will receive tutorial assistance from college students as they review the students' performance on the sample test. Between November 15 and April 15 each College Bound student has a personal interview with a College Bound counselor in which his opportunities and possibilities are discussed. Counselors then keep in touch with the students until the application process has been completed. Lundy said he "feels we are counseling parents as well as students." The median education level of the parents of College Bound students is seventh grade, he said. "Some parents are very skeptical and others are very suspicious," noted Lundy. He plans to have some sort of parent night to better acquaint the parents with the program. The program is being run on contributions, explained Lundy. The university is providing office space and enough funds to pay such outright expenses as printing and postage. However, Loyola's office of research is trying to secure federal funds so the program can have a full-time director and staff and a more stable future, said Lundy. The program may move its headquarters off campus to a more central location when it gets a full-time director, said Lundy. GEORGE LUNDY HEAVY SOUNDS-Blood, Sweat and Tears, nationally known rock group, will appear at the Loyola Field House Nov. 8 as an attraction of the Student Union. Tickets are $3, $4 and $5 (with a 50 cent discount for students with Loyola IDs) Group seeks to abolish cut system The Curriculum Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences voted Tuesday to recommend that the cuts system be abolished. Dr. Frank Crabtree, Dean of Arts and Sciences, suggested that the committee ask the A&S faculty to recommend that the Rev. Thomas Clancy, S.J., academic vice president, abolish the system because Dr. Crabtree felt Father Clancy would veto the committees request. Dr. Crabtree said he had talked with Father Clancy about the possibility of abolishing the cut system. He pointed out that last year only 14 students in A&S were cut out of classes and all were reinstated after appealing to the Deans. Dr. Crabtree said students are now allowed to cut twice the number of credit hours of a course. If a student over cuts, he can appeal to the Dean of Men or Woman and to the Dean of his college, said Dr. Crabtree. Dr. Crabtree said Father Clancy told him that although the system seemed not to be effective, it "was good for them (the students) to go through the exercise" of petitioning to get back into the class. Many members of the committee said they would like to abolish the system provided there was a provision for freshmen. Most agreed that freshman yeat was a period of transition and adjustment and that freshmen should not be given too much freedom. They also suggested that a formal statement be put in the bulletin emphasizing that class attendance is expected of all students. The committee also recommended that the College of A&S replace the mid-term grades with a system whereby students and their advisors wo receive a notice indicating that they are failing or in danger of failing a course. This recommendation was directed .principally at the freshmen. The committee felt that freshmen are more in need of a guage in which to gear themselves than are upperclassmen. The committee also approved a proposal for an A&S rank and tenure committee. The committee would consist of nine members, six selected from the untenured members. Students consultation will be sought from student representatives through the University Research Team. Students will not participate in the voting of the committee. The term of office for the members will be three years with one-third remewable every year. The initial term of office will be determined by lot within each area. DR. FRANK CRABTREE Freshmen candidates file for next week's election By STEVE VAKAS (Maroon Staff Reporter) Candidates for freshmen elections in three colleges were announced at Tuesday's Student Council meeting. The primary will take place Monday and Tuesday. Three students are running for president of the College of Business Administration: Marty Georges, Joseph Charbonnet and Wayne Fontana. Eileen Hooper signed up as the only vice-presidential candidate for that school. Elaine Early was announced as a candidate for secretary and Mark DePaolo signed up for treasurer. In the College of Music, presidential candidates are Larry J. Sarrat and Sandra Folse. Sue St. Amant signed up as the only vice-presidential candidate. No candidates were announed for the offices of secretary or treasurer. Five students are running for president of the College of Arts and Sciences: Joe Meng, Bob Rivard, John G. Baugh, John M. Aselage and Ernest (Tony) Kubena. Vice-presidential candidates are Mike Moncrief, Sam Gregorio, Ed Tanner and Joan Offut. Candidates for the office of secretary are Tara Quinn, Frank Kohl and Terry Smith. Jann Seidenfaden, Randy Dupont and Ted Grable signed up to run for the office of treasurer. Run-offs will be held, if necessary, on the following Monday and Tuesday, according to George Joint, chairman of the Elections Committee. Council members followed up on a recommendation by council president BillV Guste. An amendment was proposed calling for a council member to be suspended after three excused or unexcused absenses. Council rules now allow a member to be absent from meetings five times. The motion was tabled and will be considered by the Constitutional Committee. Two new members were sworn into the council. They are Raymond Bergeron and Dudley Arledge. There had been two vacancies in the Evening Division. The number of council members is now 40. The council voted to appropriate $73.13 to the St. Thomas More Law Club to help defray costs of posters which advertised the speeches and discussions held by New Orlean's District Attorney candidates on campus recently. Twenty-four council members were present at the meeting. The meeting ended at 6:45 due to lack of a quorum (a quorum is one-half of the entire membership, in this case 20 members constitutes a quorum). Game, dance to highlight homecoming Tenative plans for student participation in' homecoming have been announced by John Koval, co-chairman of the Student Union Homecoming Committee. Koval said the main events of the week for students will be the homecoming basketball game Dec. 2 against Tampa and the homecoming dance for students Dec. 5. He added that there will be a dance Tuesday afternoon before thegame-a TGIF on Tuesday. The Buckinghams have been contracted for the Dec. 5 dance, while no band has yet been signed for the TGIT. (continued on page 3)

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LOYOLA MAROON VOL. XLVI Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday October 24, 1969 No. 8 Loyola students receive honor Thirty-four Loyola students have been nominated for "Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges." The students were nominated on the basis of scholarship, leadership, and character. Their names will be included in the "Who's Who" publication. The students are: Ralph Adamo, A&S senior, member of Student Council; Barbara Bennett, BA senior, Phi Chi Theta; Louis Biondolillo, Evening Division junior, member of Student Council, Blue Key; Stanley Bjurstrom, Law School senior, Editor-in-Chief of Loyola Law Review. Gerard Brechtel, BA senior, member of Alpha Sigma Nu, Beta Alpha Phi, Beta Gamma Sigma; Patrick Burk, S.J., A&S senior, member of Student Council; David Caruso Jr., law school senior, president of Delta Sigma Nu, Council General of the Loyola Student Court; John Conery, law school senior, president of the Student Bar Association, member of Alpha Sigma Nu, Blue Key. Jocelyn Develle, law school senior, Managing Editor of Loyola Law Review; James Dumas Jr., dental school senior, president of dental school, president of senior class, member of Alpha Sigma Nu, Blue Key; George Fisher, dental school senior, member of Student Council, Blue Key; Clifford Giffin Jr., BA senior, president of APO, service vice president of Delta Sigma Pi, post director, business manager and associate editor of the Loyola directory. John Gregory Jr., dental school junior, member of Chi Psi Phi, C. Victor Vignes Odontological society, SCADA; William Guste, A&S senior, student body president, member of APO, Delta Epsilon Sigma; Kathleen Hall, A&S senior, president of Delta Who's Who taps 34 Epsilon Sigma, cheer lea ding captain; Carol Laflin, A&S senior, president of WRC, member of Cardinal Key, Delta Epsilon Sigma. Michael Lange, A&S senior, Maroon editor, vice president of the Student Union, member of Blue Key; Antonio Lopez Jr., A&S senior; Rev. George Lundy, S.J., A&S senior; Frank Macaluso, BA senior, president of Delta Sigma Pi. Patricia Manning, BA senior, president of Sigma Sigma Sigma, vice president of Cardinal Key, secretary of the Dance and Entertainment committee of the Student Union, Beta Gamma Sigma; George Mattingly, BA senior, president of Student Union, member of Senior Project; Michael Miroue, dental school junior, C. Victor Vignes Honor Society, C. Victor Vignes Odontological Society, Psi Phi; Charmaine Morales, School of Music senior, Phi Beta. Patricia Nugent, A&S senior, member of Cardinal Key; Linda O'Dwyer, A&S senior, Dean's List, Phi Phi Phi, National Honor Society, Curriculum Planning committee; Wayne Pike, Evening Division junior; Robert Roux, School of Music senior. Elisa Specht, A&S senior, Tri Sigma; Lloyd Tate, BA senior, member of Student Union; Pamela Tiller, A&S junior, president of LSL; Elizabeth Valadie, A&S senior. Alan Vera, A&S senior, ROTC battalion commander; SUsa Wheeler, A&S senior, member of Beta Phi, WRC, Cardinal Key. The students who have been nominated are now required to fill out information sheets and return them to national Who's Who headquarters for publication in teh 1969-70 edition of the student's Who's Who. The Loyola nominees will receive certificates to not this accomplishment at Awards Day which will be held during the Spring semester. SYMPOSIUM GUEST-Author Harry Crews listens attentively to the poetry readings of Dr. John Corrington during Wednesday's opening of the English department's Writer's Symposium. The event closes today with a panel discussion in rooms 2 A,B, and C of Danna Center. Leaders term moratorium successful ByANNALYN SWAN (Maroon Staff Reporter) The peace banners are gone, the armbands have disappeared, and in the Danna Center the TV once again reigns supreme~the October 15 Moratorium Day is over. To the organizers of Loyola's memorial service, however, October 15 stands as a crucial date, the springboard for future activation in the cause of peace. Campus moratorium organizers the Rev. Joseph Tetlow, S.J., and Students for Peace members John Aselage and Jim Brehony agree that both the Loyola service and subsequent march were successful. "When a large number of people turn out for an anti-war protest in a traditionally conservative city like New Orleans, that protest must be termed a success," said freshman Aselage. Aselage also pointed out the importance of Loyola's service: "The campus memorial observance was a success. Although only 250 people turned out for the service, a good core of antiwar support was formed in Loyola, a core which probably will grow as the war continues." November action planned Father Tetlow viewed the campus service from several different perspectives. "I didn't think it entirely successful because it didn't mobilize the opinion of the entire university against war. To that extent it was a failure," he said. "However, that is really a small view," he added. "In a larger view the moratorium at Loyola was a success, because first, it created a climate of discussion and a moral pressure to take a stance; second, it demonstrated the strength of antiwar feeling on campus." The march downtown on October 15 also impressed Father Tetlow. He thought that the large turnout showed students* ability to mobilize opinion and action on a central national issue. Jim Brehony described the intense unity of the moratorium participants as a factor of importance: "There was just this air of closeness among the crowd (at City Hall.) Everyone listened to the speakers, enjoyed the band, and turned on to the cause." Father Tetlow, Aselage, and Brehony feel that the moratorium's success, both in New Orleans and across the country, will inevitably have Lundy initiates 'Operation College Bound' A college placement program for poor and disadvantaged high school seniors in the New Orleans area has been initiated by George Lundy, S.J., A&S senior, director of the program. Operation College Bound, directed and completely staffed by Loyola students, is a "clearing house" designed to serve as a liaison between students and universities, said Lundy. The program, the first of its kind in the city, is attempting to fill the counseling deficiency in the New Orleans School system, noted Lundy. He pointed out that there are 600 students to every counselor in the school system. Lundy explained that almost 50 per cent of all white high school graduates in America today go on to college, but only less than 15 per cent of the minority group students go on to higher learning. He said these figures reflect the need for a College Bound program. Out of the 20 schools in the metropolitan area invited to participate in the program only six accepted. They are George Washington Carver, Joseph S. Clark, Waller L. Cohen, Francis T. Nicholls, St. Augustine, and Booker T. Washington. Of these, the only predominately white school is Nicholls. Lundy noted that only students who have attained a 77 average or higher in high school are eligible to partake in the program. "There is just about nothing we can do with a student with a D average," he said. During the past summer, letters were sent to all of the four year colleges and universities in the United States, said Lundy. Specific information was requested concerning admission policies, special remedial programs and financial assistance. Over 500 colleges responded and the information was stored in the Loyola computer facilities, he said. In this way, opportunities offered by colleges and universities nationwide can be matched quickly with the needs and credentials of the high school seniors, he explained. Applications to the program are coming in and are expected to reach 700 before the October 28 deadline, said Lundy. To determine who is eligible for the program, a senior assembly is conducted at participating high schools. Applications are distributed which are turned in to the high school counselors. The counselors screen the applications to eliminate those students clearly ineligible. The applications are then turned over to College Bound. The students accepted are then invited to take part in a pre-testing program which is designed to familiarize them with the college board examination they will take in December. The students will take the sample test at Loyola on Sunday, November 2. On the following three Sunday afternoons, the students will receive tutorial assistance from college students as they review the students' performance on the sample test. Between November 15 and April 15 each College Bound student has a personal interview with a College Bound counselor in which his opportunities and possibilities are discussed. Counselors then keep in touch with the students until the application process has been completed. Lundy said he "feels we are counseling parents as well as students." The median education level of the parents of College Bound students is seventh grade, he said. "Some parents are very skeptical and others are very suspicious," noted Lundy. He plans to have some sort of parent night to better acquaint the parents with the program. The program is being run on contributions, explained Lundy. The university is providing office space and enough funds to pay such outright expenses as printing and postage. However, Loyola's office of research is trying to secure federal funds so the program can have a full-time director and staff and a more stable future, said Lundy. The program may move its headquarters off campus to a more central location when it gets a full-time director, said Lundy. GEORGE LUNDY HEAVY SOUNDS-Blood, Sweat and Tears, nationally known rock group, will appear at the Loyola Field House Nov. 8 as an attraction of the Student Union. Tickets are $3, $4 and $5 (with a 50 cent discount for students with Loyola IDs) Group seeks to abolish cut system The Curriculum Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences voted Tuesday to recommend that the cuts system be abolished. Dr. Frank Crabtree, Dean of Arts and Sciences, suggested that the committee ask the A&S faculty to recommend that the Rev. Thomas Clancy, S.J., academic vice president, abolish the system because Dr. Crabtree felt Father Clancy would veto the committees request. Dr. Crabtree said he had talked with Father Clancy about the possibility of abolishing the cut system. He pointed out that last year only 14 students in A&S were cut out of classes and all were reinstated after appealing to the Deans. Dr. Crabtree said students are now allowed to cut twice the number of credit hours of a course. If a student over cuts, he can appeal to the Dean of Men or Woman and to the Dean of his college, said Dr. Crabtree. Dr. Crabtree said Father Clancy told him that although the system seemed not to be effective, it "was good for them (the students) to go through the exercise" of petitioning to get back into the class. Many members of the committee said they would like to abolish the system provided there was a provision for freshmen. Most agreed that freshman yeat was a period of transition and adjustment and that freshmen should not be given too much freedom. They also suggested that a formal statement be put in the bulletin emphasizing that class attendance is expected of all students. The committee also recommended that the College of A&S replace the mid-term grades with a system whereby students and their advisors wo receive a notice indicating that they are failing or in danger of failing a course. This recommendation was directed .principally at the freshmen. The committee felt that freshmen are more in need of a guage in which to gear themselves than are upperclassmen. The committee also approved a proposal for an A&S rank and tenure committee. The committee would consist of nine members, six selected from the untenured members. Students consultation will be sought from student representatives through the University Research Team. Students will not participate in the voting of the committee. The term of office for the members will be three years with one-third remewable every year. The initial term of office will be determined by lot within each area. DR. FRANK CRABTREE Freshmen candidates file for next week's election By STEVE VAKAS (Maroon Staff Reporter) Candidates for freshmen elections in three colleges were announced at Tuesday's Student Council meeting. The primary will take place Monday and Tuesday. Three students are running for president of the College of Business Administration: Marty Georges, Joseph Charbonnet and Wayne Fontana. Eileen Hooper signed up as the only vice-presidential candidate for that school. Elaine Early was announced as a candidate for secretary and Mark DePaolo signed up for treasurer. In the College of Music, presidential candidates are Larry J. Sarrat and Sandra Folse. Sue St. Amant signed up as the only vice-presidential candidate. No candidates were announed for the offices of secretary or treasurer. Five students are running for president of the College of Arts and Sciences: Joe Meng, Bob Rivard, John G. Baugh, John M. Aselage and Ernest (Tony) Kubena. Vice-presidential candidates are Mike Moncrief, Sam Gregorio, Ed Tanner and Joan Offut. Candidates for the office of secretary are Tara Quinn, Frank Kohl and Terry Smith. Jann Seidenfaden, Randy Dupont and Ted Grable signed up to run for the office of treasurer. Run-offs will be held, if necessary, on the following Monday and Tuesday, according to George Joint, chairman of the Elections Committee. Council members followed up on a recommendation by council president BillV Guste. An amendment was proposed calling for a council member to be suspended after three excused or unexcused absenses. Council rules now allow a member to be absent from meetings five times. The motion was tabled and will be considered by the Constitutional Committee. Two new members were sworn into the council. They are Raymond Bergeron and Dudley Arledge. There had been two vacancies in the Evening Division. The number of council members is now 40. The council voted to appropriate $73.13 to the St. Thomas More Law Club to help defray costs of posters which advertised the speeches and discussions held by New Orlean's District Attorney candidates on campus recently. Twenty-four council members were present at the meeting. The meeting ended at 6:45 due to lack of a quorum (a quorum is one-half of the entire membership, in this case 20 members constitutes a quorum). Game, dance to highlight homecoming Tenative plans for student participation in' homecoming have been announced by John Koval, co-chairman of the Student Union Homecoming Committee. Koval said the main events of the week for students will be the homecoming basketball game Dec. 2 against Tampa and the homecoming dance for students Dec. 5. He added that there will be a dance Tuesday afternoon before thegame-a TGIF on Tuesday. The Buckinghams have been contracted for the Dec. 5 dance, while no band has yet been signed for the TGIT. (continued on page 3)